Enabling a Better Sign On Experience for your Customers

Governments and citizens both benefit when services are delivered online. But the adoption of online government services is often constrained by challenges with user registration and authentication. The usual problems of password security, forgotten passwords and sign-up abandonment are heightened for government services - they need to know its you to deliver the service. High credential churn drives up operational costs, weakens security posture, and frustrates users who want to accomplish tasks online.

To combat password problems, many commercial sites are now introducing “Bring Your Own Credential” solutions. But can BYOC work for government services. Join us as we discuss practical ways that government services can implement BYOC solutions to improve the customer experience while enhancing site security, business assurance and citizen privacy.

Join this webinar to learn …

The business case for “Bring Your Own Credential” – Salim Hasham, National Cyber Resilience Leader, PwC Canada
Customer Spotlight - GC View on implementing BYOC in the Public Sector – Rita Whittle, Executive Director, Government of Canada Security Policy
Government of Canada
Top 5 questions that the public sector needs to think about when considering BYOC – Andre Boysen, EVP of Marketing, SecureKey Technologies
Heartbleed - Andre Boysen, EVP of Marketing, SecureKey Technologies

In what might be the most dramatic lapse of Internet security in history, the Heartbleed bug has shaken every corner of the web. Heartbleed threatens a web services in a wide variety of industries across the globe - 2/3 of the websites on the Internet used the compromised the OpenSSL technology.

So now what? Leaders everywhere are seeking solutions that can reduce risk and strengthen business assurance. How to increase business assurance without driving up the cost or driving customer nuts?

This webinar provides key insights on the lessons learned from the Heartbleed Bug. Webinar attendees will receive an:

- Overview of the global impact of Heartbleed
- Exploration of the consequences and possible limitations of remediation to similar attacks in the future
- Introduction of the concept of Digital ID and the role of Dynamic Authentication has to play to make customer access easier and to increase security.
- Insight into the lessons learned and recommendations on how to anchor customer Digital IDs in trusted devices with dynamic authentication.

Governments and citizens both benefit when services are delivered online. But the adoption of online government services is often constrained by challenges with user registration and authentication. The usual problems of password security, forgotten passwords and sign-up abandonment are heightened for government services - they need to know its you to deliver the service. High credential churn drives up operational costs, weakens security posture, and frustrates users who want to accomplish tasks online.

To combat password problems, many commercial sites are now introducing “Bring Your Own Credential” solutions. But can BYOC work for government services. Join us as we discuss practical ways that government services can implement BYOC solutions to improve the customer experience while enhancing site security, business assurance and citizen privacy.

Join this webinar to learn …

The business case for “Bring Your Own Credential” – Salim Hasham, National Cyber Resilience Leader, PwC Canada
Customer Spotlight - GC View on implementing BYOC in the Public Sector – Rita Whittle, Executive Director, Government of Canada Security Policy
Government of Canada
Top 5 questions that the public sector needs to think about when considering BYOC – Andre Boysen, EVP of Marketing, SecureKey Technologies
Heartbleed - Andre Boysen, EVP of Marketing, SecureKey Technologies

In the year 2020, trends that are hot today, such as mCommerce, virtual money and privacy will be commonplace. These disruptive topics and technologies should be examined and considered when building a digital strategy. Organizations that choose to ignore them, might find themselves behind the curve. Join Royal Canadian Mint, Modo, and Intel as they discuss:

Digital Currency and the Role of Smart Devices:
- What is digital/virtual currency?
- What is the value proposition and what problems does virtual currency solve?
- Critical Trends in the virtual currency market?
- Is virtual currency all about mobile payments?
- Where will this be in 2020

Views from Mint, Modo, and Intel on what is critical to any mobile/digital strategy today and the future
- What are the characteristics of a solid digital payment solution?
- What do stakeholders need to do to be ready?
- The Importance of Mobile Security and Payments
- What is necessary for user adoption, whether it is consumers, merchants, banks and other financial institutions

Our digital identities are critical elements to our lives. Yet, most users today are managing more and more identities, with no end in sight.

To explore the notion of digital identity join SecureKey and Forrester Research, Inc., for our upcoming webinar to learn why:

•Users struggle with login issues while site operators struggle with low business assurance and high service costs
•Social sign-in hints at a solution, but fails at security and privacy
•Sites can solve this by accepting trusted reusable identities
•The inevitable choice: Should you rely on a trusted reusable Identity your customer already has? Or become a trusted identity provider to strengthen and monetize your customer relationship?

The Internet model is going to change, don't get left behind ...

All webinar attendees will receive a complimentary copy of the Thought Leadership Paper, Increase Security and User Trust, Embrace a Federated Consumer Identity Model a commissioned study conducted by Forrester Consulting on behalf of SecureKey Technologies.

One of today's biggest challenges for Internet users today is the sheer number of IDs and passwords we need to manage our online life. With every single destination, users have dedicated user ID and password -- and we've kind of reached the point that that's not scalable any more. One alternative solution is to use credential federation, providing the user a smaller set of credentials to reach all of their online destinations.

SecureKey Concierge, is an innovative Credential Broker Service that allows Canadians to use their bank authentication credentials to access online services from the Government of Canada. Four of Canada’s largest banks are the initial Trusted Sign-In Partners, with other financial institutions expected to follow in the coming months.